澳大利亚公共项目投标中的性别问题

Liyan Tang, S. Sohail, Emma Shorthouse, Larissa Sullivan, M. Williams
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摘要

在过去的二十年里,澳大利亚建筑业中从事职业的女性人数有所增加。尽管澳大利亚政府在此期间实施了研究、战略和倡议,但在1998年至2020年期间增加的百分比仅为0.2%,令人失望。这项研究的目的是评价和支持在招标文件中规定性别百分比的立法概念,以及这种改变如何能增加公共项目中妇女的人数。对来自数据库Scopus的学术资料进行了系统的文献回顾,并对该行业的女性进行了专题分析。结果发现了四个主题:代表性不足、职业障碍、教育途径和就业机会。这些主题加强了制定诸如公共项目的性别要求等立法的必要性。所建立的联系是,性别立法将增加就业机会的数量,更多的工作将鼓励各级教育促进建筑业中的妇女,更多的妇女从事建筑业将改善其代表性不足的问题,从而使劳动力中以妇女为中心的问题成为一个更普遍的问题,并更有可能得到改善。该论文的结论是,为了看到澳大利亚建筑行业女性人数的增加,政府必须采取可执行的立法改革。这一变化必须从制定立法开始,要求那些想要与政府投标的组织在任何拟议的公共工程提交中必须有最低比例的女性,然后才能获得批准。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Put Gender on the Tender in Australian Public Projects
Australia’s construction industry throughout the last two decades has seen an increase in the number of women pursuing careers. The percentage it has increased by between 1998 and 2020 is a disappointing 0.2% despite the research, strategies, and initiatives the Australian Government has implemented during the interval. The purpose of this study is to evaluate and support the legislative notion of required gender percentages on tendering documents and how this change could increase the number of women in public projects. A systematic literature review of scholarly sources from the database Scopus was applied to develop a thematic analysis of women in the industry. The results found four themes: underrepresentation, barriers to career, education pathways, and opportunities for employment. These themes reinforced the need to introduce legislation such as gender requirements for public projects. Connections made were that gender legislation would increase the number of job opportunities, more jobs would encourage all levels of education to promote women in construction, more women in construction would improve their underrepresentation, and thus make women-centric problems in the workforce a more common issue and more likely to improve. The paper concludes that to see an increase in the number of women in Australia’s construction industry, the government must take enforceable legislative change. This change must start by creating legislation that requires organisations that want to tender with the government to have a minimum percentage of women in any proposed public works submission before it can be awarded.
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